Tuesday, Walmart updated its music store with a cleaner more accessible layout. 3 million songs, compared to Apple’s near 8.5m, are offered (Not all of Apple’s music is DRM-Free).

Following the high volume, lower price service model that Walmart is known for, they’ll compete with iTunes and Amazon on price. MP3’s will be available from the music store at 94 cents a song compared to iTunes 99 cents. Top hits will be discounted to as low as 74cents per song. Free downloads will be bundled with album purchases.

Is this the start of a price war some may ask? Probably not. With songs near 99 cents already seeming to push toward the lower boundary of most music sellers acceptable profit range, and with WalMart almost certainly eating the discount out of its share of revenues, it’s hard to believe there’s a lot of net income upside for the retailer. The price cuts seem more likely to function as a lure to book broader holiday period sales. Other retailers aren’t likely to follow. Still, with its share of music sales potentially in jeopardy from growing online offerings at competitors, Walmart is moving forward.

In addition, Walmart is also pursuing exclusive deals with select artists. Last week, for example, AC/DC released their first studio album in 8 years. Aside from the band’s website, Walmart has exclusive retail rights in the U.S. It’s available in stores, however, not as a download.